Cu Chi Tunnels

1 06 2009

Visiting the Cu Chi Tunnels provides a better understanding of the prolonged resistance war of the Vietnamese people and also of the persistent and clever character of the Vietnamese nation.

Cu Chi District is known nationwide as the base where the Vietnamese mounted their operations of the Tet Offensive in 1968.The tunnels are between 0.5 to 1m wide, just enough space for a person to walk along by bending or dragging. However, parts of the tunnels have been modified to accommodate visitors. The upper soil layer is between 3 to 4m thick and can support the weight of a 50-ton tank and the damage of light cannons and bombs. The underground network provided sleeping quarters, meeting rooms, hospitals, and other social rooms.

For a place that’s physically invisible, the Cu Chi Tunnels have sure carved themselves a celebrated niche in the history of guerilla warfare. Its celebrated and unseen geography straddles – all of it underground – something which the Americans eventually found as much to their embarrassment as to their detriment. They were dug, before the American War, in the late 1940s, as a peasant-army response to a more mobile and ruthless French occupation. The plan was simple: take the resistance briefly to the enemy and then, literally, vanish.

First the French, then the Americans were baffled as to where they melted to, presuming, that it was somewhere under cover of the night in the Cuu Long (Mekong) Delta. But the answer lay in the sprawling city under their feet – miles and miles of tunnels. In the gap between French occupation and the arrival of the Americans the tunnels fell largely into disrepair, but the area’s thick natural earth kept them intact and maintained by nature. In turn it became not just a place of hasty retreat or of refuge, but, in the words of one military historian, “an underground land of steel, home to the depth of hatred and the incommutability of the people.” It became, against the Americans and under their noses, a resistance base and the headquarters of the southern Vietnam Liberation Forces. The linked threat from the Viet Cong – the armed forces of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam – against the southern city forced the unwitting Americans to select Cu Chi as the best site for a massive supply base – smack on top of the then 25-year old tunnel network. Even sporadic and American’s grudgingly had to later admit, daring attacks on the new base, failed for months to indicate where the attackers were coming from – and, importantly, where they were retreating to. It was only when captives and defectors talked that it became slightly more clear. But still the entries, exits, and even the sheer scale of the tunnels weren’t even guessed at. Chemicals, smoke-outs, razing by fire, and bulldozing of whole areas, pinpointed only a few of the well-hidden tunnels and their entrances. The emergence of the Tunnel Rats, a detachment of southern Vietnamese working with Americans small enough to fit in the tunnels, could only guess at the sheer scale of Cu Chi. By the time peace had come, little of the complex, and its infrastructure of schools, dormitories, hospitals, and miles of tunnels, had been uncovered. Now, in peace, only some of it is uncovered – as a much-visited part of the southern tourist trail. Many of the tunnels are expanded replicas, to avoid any claustrophobia they would induce in tourists. The wells that provided the vital drinking water are still active, producing clear and clean water to the three-tiered system of tunnels that sustained life. A detailed map is almost impossible, for security reasons if nothing else: an innate sense of direction guided the tunnellers and those who lived in them.

Some routes linked to local rivers, including the Saigon River, their top soil firm enough to take construction and the movement of heavy machinery by American tanks, the middle tier from mortar attacks, and the lower, 8-10m down was impregnable. A series of hidden, and sometimes booby-trapped, doors connected the routes, down through a system of narrow, often unlit and invented tunnels. At one point American troops brought in a well-trained squad of 3000 sniffer dogs, but the German Shepherds were too bulky to navigate the courses. One legend has it that the dogs were deterred by Vietnamese using American soap to throw them off their scent, but more usually pepper and chilly spray was laid at entrances, often hidden in mounds disguised as molehills, to throw them off. But the Americans were never passive about the tunnels, despite being unaware of their sheer complexity. Large-scale raiding operations used tanks, artillery and air raids, water was pumped through known tunnels, and engineers laid toxic gas. But one American commander’s report at the time said: “It’s impossible to destroy the tunnels because they are too deep and extremely tortuous.”

Today the halls that showed propagandas films, housed educational meetings and schooled Vietnamese in warfare are largely intact. So too are the kitchens where visitors can dine on steamed manioc, pressed rice with sesame and salt, a popular meal during the war, as they are assailed with true stories of how life went on as near-normal, much of the time. Ancestors were worshipped there, teaching was well-timetabled, poultry was raised – and even couples trusted, fell in love, were wed, and honeymooned there. But visitors have it easier: those re-constructed tunnels give the flavour of the tunnels but not the claustrophobia and the sacrifice of the estimated 18,000 who served their silent and unseen war there with only around one-third surviving, the rest casualties of American assaults, snakes, rats and insects.

Now the unseen and undeclared No Man’s Land is undergoing a revival, saluted as a Relic of National History and Culture with its Halls of Tradition displaying pictures and exhibits. The nearby Ben Duoc-Cu Chi War Memorial, where the reproduced tunnels have been built, stands as an-above ground salute to a hidden war.

Vietnam tour operating|
Saigon Travel Agent|
Luxury Cruise Halong bay |

vinpearl-resort-





Halong Bay ( fullday )

19 05 2009

Depart from : Ha noi
Stop off : Ha noi
Duration : 1 days 0 nights
Ha Long Bay, located in the Gulf of Tonkin, covers an area of 1500 square km. With more than a thousand limestone peaks soaring from its crystalline emerald water this area is one of the natural wonders of Vietnam and now one of four World Heritage listed sites in Vietnam. Visitors have constantly marveled at Halong Bays natural beauty. The tiny islands are dotted with innumerable beaches and grottoes created by the wind and the waves that make a excellent backdrop for swimming or just lazing about on the boat deck.

Package 1 pax 2 – 3 pax 4 – 6 pax Over 7
Standard $157 $89 $63 $45 Book now !
Customize this tour

[Dragon's pearl junk Ha Long]
AM: 8h30 Departure from your hotel. Enjoy the interesting 3,5 hour drive to Ha Long city with a stopover on the way.
12h00 Arrive in Ha Long city – get on your private boat and then a lunch will be served on boat. Your cruise will last 4 hours, through the emerald waters between the limestone outcrops and long corridors, visit THIEN CUNG cave (the cave of the heavenly palace – famous for its stalagmites and stalactites), the cave has only opened to the public since 1998 .
A short way visit the newly discovered DAU GO grotto (wooden stakes) – where in 1288 one of Vietnamese most famous Generals Tran Hung Dao amassed hundreds of stakes deep inside the cave prior to a battle with an invading Mongol army.).
16h00 Back to Halong city where your minibus will be waiting for you to take you back to Hanoi .
19h00 Arrive in Hanoi. End of the tour

Inclusions : Transport by private car/van, private boat trip, lunch, entrance fee and tour guide.

Exclusions : Personal expenses, drinks, tips.

Vietnam tour operating
Halong Tours|
Nha Trang Municipal Beach|

Folk-Paintings





Fish dishes in Phu Tho

9 05 2009

One interesting way to reach a new land and new culture is to enjoy foods there. The idea is always right because gastronomy is cultural characteristics of each region. Phu Tho, the ancestor’s land, will serve friends and guests from every corner of country with its special-but-popular dishes.

Lang junction: habitat living is wide, deep and strong current rivers. The fishes live in river-bottom and their food is small animals. They only appear on the water surface when they are grown-up so fishermen can catch big fish of few kilos to dozens of kilos. Lang fish is the bes tasty catfish.

In the three rivers junction of Viet Tri, there is Anh Vu fish which is considered as rarest river fish. Anh vu fish also live in river bottom eating mosses on stones. They shelter in caves during the summer time and go out in autumn and winter seasons. Therefore, Anh Vu fish can be caught only in chilled and misty days. In the feudal period, Anh Vu fish were dedicated to kings only. But now the price of Anh Vu is so expensive that only star-classified hotels can be afford.

Chay fish live in a section of Thao River of Thanh Ba district. The fish has two delicious spawns. Connoisseurs do not hesitate to choose Chay fish for their eating enjoyment.

In recent years, in Viet Tri city there are some restaurants serving these fishes. The most well-known and long-existed one is Quan Ca Bo Song (Riverside Fish Restaurant) and following by Quan Ca Bach Hac (Bach Hac Fish Restaurant) and some others.

Vietnam Visa, Vietnam Tourist Visa, Vietnam Visa On Arrival
Sapa tour and Fansipan trekking tour
Along the Mekong River Tour – Along the Mekong River

tra-co-festival





The art of the Khmer’s dance

17 04 2009

The culture of the Southern ethnic minority of Khmer is most reflected in the art of dance. Although influenced by Indian art, the Khmer art has its own typical identity, which has helped beautify the diverse arts of the Vietnamese ethnic minorities.

The Khmer dance has existed for a very long time in the art form of Robam, a classical opera, with dancing being the main language to reflect the story, situations and the feelings of the characters of the drama. The plots of almost all Robam dramas are legendary, therefore they are well reflected by dancing.

Besides the Robam art, there is the Duke opera, which was formed later. In this art, dancing does not play a key role, but it focuses on reflecting imitatively the mood of a character, with high stylization. Through the Duke dancing, the movements of the animals, such as the sacred bird (Krud), ogre (Yeak), sacred snake (Naga), monkey (Hanuman) and dragon (Phuchong) are scientifically systemzed and standardized. For example, there are 12 movements to reflect the activities of a monkey, including smiling, kowtowing, crying, jumping, joy and sorrow.

The Khmer dance has two main types, i.e. the royal and folk dances. The royal dance has became standardized and systemized. There are training schools where children from 6 years old are taught.

The art of the royal dance requires hard practice from the dancers, whose smile and eye glint, as well as movements of legs and arms, must reach classical standards. All specific requirements are decisive to evaluate the qualification of the dancers.

Most of the royal dancers are women, who may play the roles of men. The royal dance has a simple composition, -using slow and deep rhythm and reflecting the mood, mainly through the appearance, especially when depicting the sacred bird (Krud) and fairy (Kennar). There are other types of dances, full of religious there are 12 movements to reflect the activities of a monkey, including smiling, kowtowing, crying, jumping, joy and sorrow.

Vietnam resort, Vietnam holiday
Along the Mekong River Tour – Along the Mekong River
Vietnam Vacation Rentals

quan-ho





Quan Lan Communal House

28 03 2009

Quan Lan Communal House is situated with a group of pagodas and shrines on Quan Lan Island Commune in the Van Don District; 35 km from Cam Pha Town and 55 km from Ha Long City. It was built at end of the Later Le Dynasty (in the 17th century), and was restored on numerous occasions during the Nguyen Dynasty.

It is dedicated to the founding fathers of the village, and also to Tran Khanh Du, the man who sunk the food supply boats of Truong Van Ho. This contribution was of great importance to the victory on the Bach Dang River in 1288.

It is built in the shape of the letter I. Its Front Ceremonial Hall has five compartments and two lean-tos. Its Back Sanctuary includes three compartments. The communal house has 32 big ironwood pillars, 26 smaller ironwood pillars. Its roof carved scale- tiles, atop of its roof has two carving dragons flanking a moon.

The main decorative themes of the building are: dragons, phoenixes, flowers and leaves, all formed in different styles at the ends of columns and frameworks. The most precious artefact still preserved in the communal house is a statue of Tran Khanh Du with 18 royal decrees from the Nguyen Emperors conferring the title of tutelary genie on him.

Next to it is Quan Lan Temple which is dedicate to Buddha, and Nghe Shrine which is dedicate Mr. Pham Cong Chinh, a local people who had sacrificed his life during the Van Don Victory.

To visit Quan Lan Island, tourists are not only enjoyed the landscape but also take bathing in the two nice beaches: Son Hao and Dau Nui, and the nicest beach is Minh Chau.

The village festivities take place here from the 10th to 20th of the sixth lunar month (the official day is on the 18th of the sixth lunar month), but the atmosphere lasts all month long.

Vietnam resort, Vietnam holiday
Mekong Boat Cruise, Mekong River Tour, Tour Mekong Vietnam
Hanoi, Vietnam travel guide

dinh-bang-communal-house





Open house

12 03 2009

Home, guesthouse, men’s club, training centre, committee room and religious space – there are many uses for the soaring Bahnar communal house being built at the Vietnam Museum of Ethnology in Hanoi Dr. Claire Sutherland reports.

Opened in June of this year, the Bahnar communal house tells a story of international co-operation to rescue a traditional feature of Vietnam’s Central Highlands from oblivion. Only painstaking ethnographic research based on old photographs and folk memory, coupled with joint funding from the museum and the German government, made reconstruction in the traditional style possible.

The sharply angled building stands a breathtaking 17 meters high, making it an attention-grabbing centrepiece for the museum’s outdoor collection of ethnic minority houses. Built by a team of 29 artisans under the expert guidance of museum ethnologists, it is a unique testimony to traditional Bahnar building styles, all but wiped out by the tribulations of history and a modernising drive. Today’s Bahnar communities are likely to have a communal house of cement and corrugated iron in the village centre, if at all.

The reason for the house’s extraordinaiy shape remains unclear, adding an aura of mystery to the surprising structure. Perhaps the ritual poles in the foreground, planted to form a bridge between the earthly and the spiritual worlds, hold a clue to the house’s symbolic meaning. It is certainly awe-inspiring, as befits the traditional power centre of Bahnar communities.

At the same time, the house represents a haven for the Bahnar boys who live in it before their marriage to acquire the knowledge and skills required for their adult life. Village elders teach the arts of hunting, basket-weaving and music. They pass down the moral code, the history and folklore of their forefathers. The communal house truly constitutes a centre of village activity, where guests enjoy Bahnar hospitality, important decisions are taken and religious rituals conducted. Although usually a male preserve during and after construction, women traditionally had the job of gathering thalch for the roof. All share in the ritual feasts held inside the house.

Vietnam tour

Ho Chi Minh City – Saigon, Vietnam travel blogs

Hanoi Stopover Tour

Tomb of Gia Long Location: Hue, Vietnamr





Car hire service

13 02 2009

Waytovietnam Travel offer you reliable travel and high quality car rental services in Viet Nam. All of our vehicles are brand new, year 2004-2007, which will best suite your requirements. The price is usually inclusive of additional driver fees and fuel/ gas. We provide English speaking drivers and most of them are willing to work on weekend.

We can supply car rental services daily, monthly or long term period with special offers.
Price per km
Kind of car Under 100km Above 100km
4 seater car $0.40 $0.35
7 seater van $0.45 $0.40
16 seater van $0.50 $0.45
25 seater bus $0.55 $0.50
35 seater bus $0.60 $0.55
45 seater bus $0.70 $0.60
Note:

– The price is subject to change without prior notice.
– The above rate excludes road fee/ toll, but including driver’s salary & fuel.
Price per route
Routes Duration 4 seater 7 seater 16 seater 25 seater 35 seater 45 seater
Ha Noi airport pick up 4 hours $25 $30 $36 $50 $60 $70
Ha Noi city tour 1 day $42 $50 $55 $65 $80 $90
Ha Noi – Ha Long 2 days $100 $135 $150 $200 $235 $268
Ha Noi – Ninh Binh – Ha Noi 1 day $75 $84 $95 $126 $147 $168
Ho Chi Minh airport pick up 4 hours $25 $30 $36 $50 $60 $70
Ho Chi Minh City tour 1 day $45 $52 $55 $65 $80 $90
Ho Chi Minh – Cu Chi 1 day $55 $65 $70 $87 $105 $125
Hue airport pick up 4 hours $20 $25 $35 $40 $50 $60
Hue City tour 1 day $30 $35 $42 $55 $60 $80
Nha Trang airport pick up $30 $40 $45 $60 $70 $85
Nha Trang city tour 1 day $35 $45 $52 $70 $75 $85
Da Nang airport pick up $20 $25 $35 $40 $50 $60
Hoi An – My Son 1 day $50 $55 $65 $80 $100 $110
Note:

– The price is subject to change without prior notice.
– The above rate excludes road fee/ toll, but including driver’s salary & fuel.
Car monthly rental in Ha Noi
Working time: 7:30AM – 5:30 PM
Number of working days per month: 26days
Limit km per month: 2,600km
Type of car Monthly cost Overtime Surcharge Km Surcharge
4 seats: Toyota Vios/Deawoo Lacetti or similaire $1,000 $2.5/hour 30 cent/km Request now
Toyota Altis, 4 seats $1,050 $3/hour 35 cent/km Request now
Toyota Camry, 4 seats $1,500 $4/hour 40 cent/km Request now
Toyota Zace/Inova/Mitsubishi Jolie, 8 seats $1,150 $3/hour 35 cent/km Request now
Ford Escape/Everet, 8 seats $1,150 $3/hour 35 cent/km Request now
Isuzu Hi – lander, 7 seats $1,150 $3/hour 35 cent/km Request now
Ford Transit/Mercedes Sprinter, 16 seats $1,200 $4/hour 40 cent/km Request now
Note:

– The price is subject to change without prior notice.
– The above rate excludes road fee/ toll, but including driver’s salary & fuel.

Vietnam Adventure Travel – Discover the Hidden Charm of Vietnam
Vietnam vacation, vietnam resort
Saigon Travel Guide – Hotels & Restaurants

Viet Nam North West Adventure -Blog





Dong Xuan Market by night

31 01 2009

Dong Xuan is a street market spreading over a surface of 600 square meters covering Dong Xuan and Khoai streets. Approximately fifty businesses are operating the forty stands selling food, artifacts, souvenirs and tour packages among others.

Unlike other Hanoi night markets selling agricultural products in Long Bien and Quang Ba, Dong Xuan Night Market has been mainly created for tourists. With its eleven stalls, the brightly lit food zone is the most animated, serving late night guests until early morning.

Here you can find real Hanoi food, as favored by true-blue Hanoians. The dishes might cost a little more than elsewhere but, you have to taste it to believe it, they are truly delicious. A steamy hot dish of Pho cuon (beef wrapped in long wispy strips of rice vermicelli, served with aromatic herbs and spicy sweet-sour fish sauce) costs a mere VND10.000.

You might have your curiosity and appetite titillated as you try to choose from a wide selection of exotic Hanoi dishes: fried frog or fish meat pastes, rice and duck meat soup, fried rice, tiet canh (duck blood uncooked, only if you have a brave heart and strong stomach!), rice vermicelli and beef cooked in the south Vietnamese style and even just beefsteak and bread.

In artifact shops on Dong Xuan Street you will find traditional Dong Ho drawings, Bat Trang ceramics, Binh Da embroideries and laces, and sand paintings, the new craze of Hanoi’s young people. For a modest sum of VND2.000 – 9.000 you can choose one of those ‘raw’ pictures with different designs and patterns.

You peel off the sheet of paper and using the multi-colored sand you are provided with, you paint and create your own masterpiece following a model or ‘ad lib’ following your own inspiration or fantasy.

Like other markets (cho) such as Sapa’s Cho Tinh, Nam Dinh’s Cho Vieng, Lang Son’s Cho Ky Lua and Can Tho’s Cho Tay Do, Dong Xuan Night Market has been set up to meet the needs of locals and tourists. Dong Xuan Night Market is only one of Hanoi’s many efforts to develop tourism and attract international visitors.

A CD-ROM and two books on Hanoi, and two annual Tourism festivals are planned to open new paths and boost tourism in Hanoi. The Hanoi Service of Communications and Public Works plans to expand and turn Dong Xuan Night Market into a no-vehicle zone to lure more visitors to the place. Two more no-vehicle zones are being delimited round Sword Lake, along Khay, Trong and Le Thai To streets and along Ngang and Dao streets.

Travel vietnam, discover vietnam culture and hidden attraction
Sword Lake, along Khay, Trong and Le Thai To
Hue Tourism – Hue Vacation

The Glowing Lanterns of Ancient Hoi An – Blog





Hill A1 Location: Dien Bien, Vietnam

20 01 2009

Hill A1 is situated in Muong Thanh Ward, Dien Bien Phu City, Dien Bien Province. Hill A1 was the strongest post of all the 49 strongholds in Dien Bien Phu fortified entrenched camp.

The hill, known in Vietnamese as A1, is one of the biggest attractions in Dien Bien Phu alongside the war cemetery and museum.

Hill A1 still bears the scars of the war, in the form of the massive crater left when Vietnamese forces hit the French fortification with 1 tonne of TNT and the network of trenches left by the French.

The hill also offers impressive views of the town itself, the Muong Thanh Valley and the rows of hills surrounding the area.

Hill A1 had three defense lines. The first one, stretching from the Cay Da blockhouse, protected the way to the hilltop. Currently this is the main road leading to the top of Hill A1. The second line was for counter-offensive assaults and the last one was a kind of underground bunker atop the hill. There were trenches connecting these three lines. Unaware of the underground bunker atop the hill, Vietnamese troops assaulted from the dried stream. To occupy one third of the hill, Vietnamese troops lost 2516 troops and discovered the bunker thanks to enemy’s flare.

Tactical method was changed. Despite numerous difficulties, Vietnamese troops dug a tunnel to destroy the bunker with explosive. After 16 days and nights, Vietnamese troops found a brick foundation, which was left from some construction built by French troops in 1940. Considering that was the bunker wall, Vietnamese troops brought 970kg of explosive there and detonated them at 20h30pm on May 6th, 1954. The pressure of the explosion made the ears of the French captain in charge of the bunker bleed. He thought that was a new kind of weapon used by Vietnamese troops and surrendered. The explosion left an enormous hole like a crater, which is rather afar from the top of Hill A1. This hole now serves as a tourist attraction.

Vietnam tour operating
Phu Quoc Tours,Tours to Phu Quoc
Nha trang tours

bach-ma-mountain- Blog





Ta Van village

19 08 2008
Ta Van village
Ta Van village
Ta Van is a small village set within a picturesque valley not far from the northern Vietnamese mountain resort of Sa Pa. The area is renowned for its colourful ethnic minorities, and Ta Van is home to two such groups. A stay with one of the farmer families here will give you a close-up experience of the life-style and culture typical of the area. Trekking in the surrounding area is most satisfying, including access to a 3-day route up Mount Fan Si Pan, to the highest point in Indo-China, at 3.143 m.
A picturesque hamlet surrounded by terraced rice fields, Ta Van Day has become a new tourist attraction in Sa Pa. The name originated because it is home primarily to Day ethnic people who have been living together since long with amity and unity. So far, this is the sole hamlet in the commune of Ta Van providing homestay facilities.  A stay with local families will help you get to know about rural village life in the North-West of Vietnam as well as enjoy the cozy atmosphere of a Day peasant family.

Just a short distance from Sa Pa, the atmosphere in Ta Van quite different. It is not active, without luxurious hotels, restaurants, and high-rise buildings. Simply, it is a quiet place for relaxation and isolation from daily busy life. You will stay in brick-roofed houses with earth floor on the mountainsides amidst terraced rice fields and primitive scenery. Yet so peaceful that you feel you are in quite different world. Perhaps, that is why visitors are especially interested in this destination. Not only you can admire the beautiful landscape, but you also can live the daily life of Day people during your stay at their homes. Again, you can feel relaxed, the peace of mind and have affection for the hospitality, warm reception and sincerity of the locals.

Expectations of community-based tourism in Ta Van are high. Homestay tourism provides an important supplement to their incomes. Your stay there will cost very little but it will put money straight into the pockets of the poor residents of this village. Over the past years, the locals have become familiar with this new type of tourism. Ma A Lu, Chairman of the communal People’s Committee was quoted by saying: ‘Before, people in Ta Van Day had no idea about tourism. Thus, the local tourism administration and authorities have delivered training for homestay operators in the rules of conduct, the culture and way of doing business, and most importantly how to make foreign visitors to pleased and to wish to come back. Additionally, the households have been assisted through a Swedish-Vietnamese project for gender equality. It is expected that by making the most of its available resources, Ta Van’s people will help visitors find out more about the land, culture and local people.

…………………………………….
shopping-in-hue – Blog







Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.